Administration GuideErrata:9-April-2001 1. Everything on a Single PageCourse Outline:In this course we investigate two importantly different approaches to the Philosophy of Mind. Both traditions marry a theory of what minds are to a theory of how language works. The first is the three hundred year old tradition of Cartesian Dualism:minds are the specially private, non-physical, conscious part of ourselves; and language is a matter of attaching public words to ideas in such minds so that we can transfer them into other minds-in-bodies. The second tradition is the twentieth-century revolution of Ludwig Wittgenstein: language is not a matter of attaching words to things but a special sort of group activity we engage in; and minds are not the inner half of a human being but a special en-minded manner in which human beings language themselves around the world. Objectives:No attempt is made to "cover" the whole of the Philosophy of Mind. Instead, these two marriages of concepts and arguments - especially arguments - are "stretched out" and discussed in depth. Textbook:The (required) textbook is made from chapters of my own book, distributed in two parts: Internal classes:One two-hour lecture per week, on Wednesday 10am - 12noon in MB2.14 * Internal tutorials:One one-hour tutorial per week, on Wednesday 2 - 3pm in MB3.52, during Weeks Two through Thirteen; attendance counts 10 marks towards the final grade (1 mark per tutorial). * Extramural campus course:Starts at 9:00am Thursday 19 April and ends at 5:00pm Friday 20 April 2001, at the Turitea Campus; to be held in the Old Main Building, room MB3.54 Email course discussion forum:[The old "email class forum" system was demolished last year and a new "class mailing list" system established, alas without anyone being told. Things are working again now.] To get on the new mailing list, send an email to majordomo@massey.ac.nz with subscribe 134201-301class in the body of the email, nothing else. The forum email address is: 134201-301class@massey.ac.nz. Assignments:Two essays, each worth 19.5 marks for internal and 24.5 marks for extramural students. Assignment due dates:Friday 06 April (end Week Six), and Friday 25 May 2001 (end Week Eleven). Final examination date:Friday, 15 June 2001, AM (9:20am-12:30pm) Assessment method:Internal assessment 49%; Final examination 51% Workload:The course credit is 12.5 points; this translates to putting in an average of 12.5 hours of work each and every week. Course Controller:Dr. Thomas W. Bestor Course Administrator:Sharon Cox, Programme Secretary
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